The Balance of Pain and Other Poems

Emily Australie Manning Heron, (1845-1890)
University of Sidney

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MANNING, EMILY MATILDA (1845-1890), writer and journalist best known as ‘Australie’, was born on 13 May 1845 in Sydney, daughter of (Sir) William Manning and his first wife Emily Anne, née Wise. Educated at a private school in Sydney, she was encouraged to take an interest in literature by Professor Woolley. From 1860 Emily lived in the family home, Wallaroy, and her friends included the children of Sir Alfred Stephen’s second marriage; balls, picnics, croquet matches, music and amateur theatricals at Government House were part of her busy and happy social life. In 1864 an exchange of light-hearted poems with D. S. Mitchell suggests a romance between him and Emily, but she soon went to England and contributed to such periodicals as Miss C. F. Yonge’s Monthly Packet, which provided ‘attractive reading of a high and refined type’ for teenage girls. After return to Australia she wrote for the Town and Country Journal, Sydney Morning Herald and Sydney Mail, either anonymously or using the pen-name ‘Australie’. She later joined the staff of the Illustrated Sydney News. On 22 December 1873 at St John’s, Darlinghurst, she married the solicitor Henry Heron (Hiron); they had six sons and a daughter.

Emily published The Balance of Pain and Other Poems (London, 1877). It included eight hymns and over twenty-five poems, one of which ‘The Emigrants’ was set to music and produced as a dramatic cantata in October 1880 by the Petersham Musical Society. Reviewers acclaimed her poems as ‘characterised by great purity of tone and loftiness of purpose’, with many pieces breathing sympathy for the suffering and trials of humanity. Able and thoughtful, she wrote on art and taste as well as questions of the day, ranging from problems of sanitation, prison discipline and forestry to the domestic matters ‘which might be expected to come within a woman’s province’. She read widely, wrote a book review column for the Sydney Mail in 1880 and was noted for ‘incisiveness and earnestness’. Interested in the higher education of women, she started a class for studying French language and literature. Survived by her husband (d.1912) and six children, she died of pneumonia on 25 August 1890 at Blandville; she was buried in the Anglican section of Waverley cemetery.

Her husband had been in financial difficulty from the early 1880s and at Emily’s death discreet reference was made to the ‘weary burden of trouble’ which enforced her withdrawal from society. The family was dependent on the kindness of her father and stepmother whose loving care for Emily and her children was gratefully recognized in 1895 by Sir William’s will.

Print Publication Details: Sally O’Neill, ‘Manning, Emily Matilda (1845 – 1890)’, Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 5, Melbourne University Press, 1974, p. 204.   http://www.findagrave.com

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